the tone modulation is a no go, i still need to work with the gain modulation (sync to the lfo).

Yes the sequencer (5 steps sequencer with option to select 3/4/5 steps) is modulating the main LFO tap ratio (the one that sweeps the volume to create tremolo, ratios are x1, x2, x3, x4 or x8 of the original tap). The sequencer will run in 2 forms, manual you press a footswitch and it will advance to next step or it will be always running advancing through the steps (based on the same frequency of your tap x1)

Option to add another LFO that will modulate the mix (so its like a tremolo inside another tremolo), this lfo will be also running on the same frequency of your tap, but you could change the wave, but the amount will be full so it will go from no trem to a complex trem pattern (depending if you also have the sequencer going).

I added this image so you have a better idea: imagine the sinusoidal carrier is your trem sound (running x4 of the tap based on the sequencer step), the baseband signal is the extra lfo (running x1 by default of the tap and also as sinusoidal wave). The amplitude modulation will be the output soundwise, a trem that is running into another slower trem. But if you start playing with waveshapes and adding the sequencer you could go into a new

only one step (set it to manual and never step the scroll footswitch)2 steps (set it to 4, and set the 1 and 3 steps to the same ratio, and 2 and 4 to the same ratio)3 steps set the toggle to 34 steps set the toggle to 45 steps set the toggle to 5

the sequencer will reset to 1 in bypass mode, so every time you activate the pedal it will start from step 1

autopilot wrote:you could cheat:...2 steps (set it to 4, and set the 1 and 3 steps to the same ratio, and 2 and 4 to the same ratio)...the sequencer will reset to 1 in bypass mode, so every time you activate the pedal it will start from step 1

That two-step sequencer could also be used to artificially divide the clock time of the sequencer relative to the LFOs. That restart feature's so cool! Does that mean it uses soft-touch switching?

the restart is linked to the bypass, so it wont be a soft touch. When the pedal enters bypass the sequencer will automatically reset to step 1.

The soft switches are for tap and manual scroll.

with the sequencer you can do some variations, for example if you have the mix lfo set to square at 60 bpm, and the tremolo lfo set to sine and the following ratios: x2(120bpm) x4 (240bpm) x3(180bpm) x 1 (60 bpm)

step 1: it will be 30 bpm of no modulation and 30 bpm modulating 120 bpm (no mod and then 1 sweeps)

step 2: it will be 30 bpm of no modulation and 30 bpm modulating 240 bpm (no mod and then 2 sweeps)

step 3: it will be 30 bpm of no modulation and 30 bpm modulating 120 bpm (no mod and then 1.5 sweeps)

step 4: it will be 30 bpm of no modulation and 30 bpm modulating 60 bpm (no mod and then half sweep)

Cool! It sounds like the sequencer works exactly like I thought it would! Having the LFOs sweep different different things is going to make for some really cool tonal variations on top of just having a complex waveform!!